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Recent SJC Property Tax Exemption Decision: Conservation Itself Without Broad Public Access Is Charitable

By Thomas Collins posted Tue May 20,2014 05:02 PM

  

In New England Forestry Foundation, Inc. v. Board of Assessors of Hawley, SJC-11432 (May 15, 2014) http://www.socialaw.com/slip.htm?cid=22811&sid=120, the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court (“SJC”), reversing a decision of the Massachusetts Appellate Tax Board (“ATB”) http://www.conservationtaxcenter.org/article/Conservation-Easements/Case-Law/NEFF-v-Hawley/873, ruled that taxpayer (“NEFF”), a Massachusetts nonprofit corporation, qualified for a charitable property tax exemption under MGL Chapter 59, Section 5, Clause Third https://malegislature.gov/Laws/GeneralLaws/PartI/TitleIX/Chapter59/Section5 with respect to a 120-acre parcel of forest land owned by NEFF in the Town of Hawley (the “Subject Property”), on the basis of NEFF’s conservation and sustainable yield forestry activities.  The ATB in its decision had concluded that (i) because forest management was not a traditional charitable endeavor under Massachusetts law, the ATB needed to examine whether NEFF’s ownership and occupation of the Subject Property served a sufficiently large and fluid class of beneficiaries to warrant the property tax exemption, and (ii) NEFF’s public educational activities and informing the public that the Subject Property was open for recreation were too limited in scope to support the proposition that the Subject Property was owned and occupied by a charitable organization in furtherance of  charitable purposes under Massachusetts law.  In ruling that environmental conservation activities would support a property tax exemption, the SJC reasoned in part that:  “NEFF’s charitable programs and activities, both in Hawley and throughout New England, are of the sort that their benefit inures to an indefinite number of people.  Historically, the “benefit” provided by land held as open space or in its natural state has been measured by the direct access of people to that land for such purposes as recreation, scenic views or education. . . .  However, as the science of conservation has advanced, it has become more apparent that properly preserved and managed conservation land can provide a tangible benefit to the community even if few people enter the land [discussion of environmental benefits to the public at large from land conservation activities].”  With respect to the occupancy requirement, the SJC stated that:  “[W]e conclude in a case such as NEFF’s where the entry of the public onto the land is not necessary for the organization to achieve its charitable purpose, the promotion and achievement of public access is not required to demonstrate occupancy of the land in order to qualify for a Clause Third exemption.”  The SJC’s decision will be of major benefit to conservation organizations desiring to focus on conservation per se.  The decision also indicates the SJC’s willingness to expand the scope of what are classified as traditional charitable activities if there is evidence that the public as a whole is benefitted by the activity in question.

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